Anthony John Crosby Marriott

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Anthony John Crosby Marriott, British playwright and screenwriter (born Jan. 17, 1931, London, Eng.—died April 17, 2014, London), co-wrote (with Alistair Foot) the mildly risqué farce No Sex Please, We’re British, which, despite scathing critical reviews, became the longest-running comedy in the history of London’s West End, drawing crowds for a total of 6,761 performances in three different theatres over a 16-year period (1971–87); the title entered the lexicon as a satiric byword for a type of sexual innuendo-laden prudery. Marriott also had a hand in the script of the 1973 film adaptation. (Foot had died suddenly shortly before the play opened on June 3, 1971.) Marriott began writing for television in the 1960s and was the cocreator of the crime drama Public Eye (1965–75). Prior to No Sex Please, he and Foot had success in the West End (1967–69) with the farce Uproar in the House. Marriott later worked alone or with other collaborators on such stage comedies as Shut Your Eyes and Think of England (1977) and No Room for Love (1978).